The new CoroMill® 390 is a versatile milling cutter for various materials and milling operations, including shoulder milling, pocketing, slot milling and face milling.
I learned to program CNC lathes and routers many many years ago, and the process of cutting the material with the most efficiency always interested me. Lovely to see these slo-mo images. Manual craftsmanship certainly has its place, but the sheer precision available when combining the right tools with the right programming (not to mention affecting durability of those tools...) is, to me, a marvel of engineering.
Let's see the cutting edge at the end! I hate demos like this. Yeah that's cool, but hows the tool life. And I'm imagining that they still look great. Show me!!!
Hi Felix! Here is the information that you are looking for: The machine tool used in the video is a DMG-MORI DMU 60 eVo. The tool assembly is made up of the following: Holder: CoroChuck 930 930-C6-S-20-091 Tool shank (1) : CoroMill 390 R390-012A-12-07M (3 inserts) Tool shank (2): CoroMill 390 R390-012A-12-07L (2 inserts) Insert: 390R-070204M-PM Grade 1130 Have a great week!
Assuming that it is steel you are milling: Since the torch cut zone is hardened / harder due to the torch cutting, I'd switch to inserts specifically for hardened steel for milling the torch cut zones.
Heat treat the part first. Stress relievement will get you the same original hardness throughout the part and also makes thhe material more stable (doesn't warp when you remove the skin layer).
у моего начальника производства подгорает пукан, когда я корпусной фрезой работаю без СОЖ, только воздух, потому что он невежественное быдло, которого папа пристроил на теплое местечко
+Charan cherry they are using MQL (minimal quantity lubrication) by the looks of it which is a mixture of air and oil. Very effective in these types of material.
+Charan cherry Hi, When machining in steel as in this case our first recommendation is to machine without coolant to ensure longest possible tool life. If there are demanding operations with chip evacuation problems, internal air or coolant is recommended for a secure process. Best regards, Thomas Wikgren Product Manager Indexable Milling
I learned to program CNC lathes and routers many many years ago, and the process of cutting the material with the most efficiency always interested me. Lovely to see these slo-mo images.
Manual craftsmanship certainly has its place, but the sheer precision available when combining the right tools with the right programming (not to mention affecting durability of those tools...) is, to me, a marvel of engineering.
instablaster.
Lol, slowmo. I guess this is real time :D
Awesome idea what the em is doing starting at 1:42, I guess I'd call it a step over down plunge. I'll keep that one in mind! Thank you! Cool video!👍👍
yeah its called plunge milling
You know what I love about watching videos like this? Makes you realize, "wow, I need to quit being a little bitch a push my cutters more"
Thought that was Aluminium until i saw the steel oxide colours...
Dandvik improving thier production
They work hard and hard
Thank you sandvik
Let's see the cutting edge at the end! I hate demos like this. Yeah that's cool, but hows the tool life. And I'm imagining that they still look great. Show me!!!
.02 corte 70 feed y 1520 RPM funcionan muy bien
What machine and toolshank is used in this video? Amazing video!
Hi Felix! Here is the information that you are looking for:
The machine tool used in the video is a DMG-MORI DMU 60 eVo.
The tool assembly is made up of the following:
Holder: CoroChuck 930 930-C6-S-20-091
Tool shank (1) : CoroMill 390 R390-012A-12-07M (3 inserts)
Tool shank (2): CoroMill 390 R390-012A-12-07L (2 inserts)
Insert: 390R-070204M-PM Grade 1130
Have a great week!
@@sandvikcoromant how does corochuck 930 compare to shrink fit holder?
What is the name of the soundtrack? It's awesome!
Warped by Light BY Jay Varton
Any tips for making the inserts last longer when milling along torch cut edges?
Assuming that it is steel you are milling: Since the torch cut zone is hardened / harder due to the torch cutting, I'd switch to inserts specifically for hardened steel for milling the torch cut zones.
try conventional milling. inserts should push hard material away, not to hit like climb milling.
Heat treat the part first. Stress relievement will get you the same original hardness throughout the part and also makes thhe material more stable (doesn't warp when you remove the skin layer).
@Tamer K
What this guy said. Breaking out though the torch cut will be far more lenient on your inserts than trying to break into it
The tolerances on that part must have been very tight.
Awsome toolwork...btw whats the name of soundtrack?
Warped by Light BY Jay Varton
lovely soundtrack!
I like it.
Warped by Light BY Jay Varton
@@apichatdissade5390 Warped by Light BY Jay Varton
INSERT CODE????
CUT CONDITIONS??
you need a Sandvik rep to come to your shop for that kind of info.
у моего начальника производства подгорает пукан, когда я корпусной фрезой работаю без СОЖ, только воздух, потому что он невежественное быдло, которого папа пристроил на теплое местечко
C сож лучше, если конечно в каталоге есть такая рекомендация.
Let me ask for cutting mode of the knife
It´s not a tools, it´s an excellent machining solution !
No need of coolant??
Not in steel
+Charan cherry they are using MQL (minimal quantity lubrication) by the looks of it which is a mixture of air and oil. Very effective in these types of material.
+Charan cherry
Hi,
When machining in steel as in this case our first recommendation is to machine without coolant to ensure longest possible tool life. If there are demanding operations with chip evacuation problems, internal air or coolant is recommended for a secure process.
Best regards,
Thomas Wikgren
Product Manager Indexable Milling
Ty
Tool is made up of which material??
Solid carcides still move more metal faster